Friday, November 30, 2007

The Kingdom of Heaven is Forcefully Advancing

Matthew 11:12

From the days of John the Baptist until now, the kingdom of heaven has been forcefully advancing, and forceful men lay hold of it. NIV

I am about to preach on this passage of scripture. I tend to use the NIV so I was about to preach "come on folks lets be forceful men who take hold of the kingdom and forcefully advance it."

But I have just read Carson's commentary on the verse in "The Expistor's Bible Commentary (1984)" which points us to an interpretation that says

"since the days of John the Baptist the Kingdom of heaven is being forcefully advanced, and violent men are pillaging it."

So that shoots my planned sermon in the foot. However, I sense that Carson's interpretation is right. I don't feel like a mighty warrior about to take hell by storm and the people who I preach to are by and large in the scared rabbit league.

So my revised interpretation is that Jesus in the power of the Holy Spirit is forcefully advancing the Kingdom of heaven every time he heals the sick, cleanses a leper or brings sight to the blind (Matt 11:5). Jesus clearly sees these as actions of spiritual warfare against the principality of darkness (cf 1 John 5:19).

This violence against the forces of evil is carried out by a child of God - a little one whose eyes and ears are open to the things revealed by the Father (verses 15 and 25).

The violent men are the people who oppose the Kingdom of heaven by persecuting the likes of John the Baptist, Jesus, James and countless other Martyrs.

The implications for me and my hearers is that although we are little children and not forceful men we can nevertheless join Jesus in his work of forcefully advancing the Kingdom of heaven as we operate in the power of the Spirit: doing good deeds that bless people and healing the sick.

1 comment:

Farallon said...

Ross, its good to see you're posting again.

I wonder if any of your blogs' target readership is of the scared rabbit league. It may be considered a little rude.

I agree with Carson. It makes me think of the theif by night, where sometimes one has to tie up the strong man before success (freedom) is realised.

Hard to apply to a less demonstrative body of folk, I agree. Maybe sometimes the miracles of the gospel, seen in the advancement of the kingdom of God, are a source of encouragement and faith building. But what comes first here, the chicken or the egg. how do you get the faith for 'miracles' and the miracles to grow faith. I digress in that miracles are not a goal in themselves, but a sign of the kingdom. Prayer, and regular reports of answers to Prayer fed back to the prayers would be my primary faith builder. God bless.